Kings Newnham
Warwickshire

In 1870-72, John Marius Wilson's Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales
described Kings Newnham like this:

NEWNHAM-REGIS, a parish in Rugby district, Warwick; on the Oxford canal, near the Trent Valley railway, 2 miles S E of Stretton r. station, and 4 N W by W of Rugby. It has a post-office, of the name of Newnham, under Rugby. Acres, 1, 418. Real property, £2, 308; of which £148 are in quarries. ...

Pop., 129. Houses, 34. The manor belonged formerly to the Crown and to Kenilworth priory. There are lime-works and a chaly-beate spring; and the latter is mentioned in Camden's Britannia, acquired considerable celebrity, went into disuse, and was restored in 1857 by the late Lord John Scott. The living is a vicarage, annexed to the rectory of Church-Lawford, in the diocese of Worcester. The church went long ago to ruin, and is now represented by only an ivy-clad tower. Its site came to be used as a stack-yard; was partly excavated in 1852; and wasfound to cover embalmed remains of several members of the noble family of Chichester.